Linton Fontenot v. Neal Lartigue

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 2014
DocketCA-0014-1327
StatusUnknown

This text of Linton Fontenot v. Neal Lartigue (Linton Fontenot v. Neal Lartigue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linton Fontenot v. Neal Lartigue, (La. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

14-1327

LINTON FONTENOT, ET AL.

VERSUS

NEAL LARTIGUE

********** APPEAL FROM THE THIRTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF EVANGELINE, NO. 75196-B HONORABLE THOMAS F. FUSELIER, DISTRICT JUDGE

********** ULYSSES GENE THIBODEAUX CHIEF JUDGE **********

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Jimmie C. Peters, and James T. Genovese, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Walter Flanders Clawson Attorney at Law 400 Travis Street, Suite 908 Shreveport, LA 71101-3116 (318) 424-1600 COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFFS/APPELLANTS: Linton Fontenot Glenn Leleux Christopher Brent Coreil Post Office Drawer 450 Ville Platte, LA 70586 (337) 363-5596 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE: Neal Lartigue

Stephen D. Hawkland Lani B. Durio 8585 Archives Ave. Baton Rouge, LA 70809 (225) 287-7476 COUNSEL FOR INTERVENOR/APPELLEE: Tom Schedler, in his official capacity as Secretary of State, State of Louisiana

Linton Fontenot In Proper Person 245 Roderick St. Ville Platte, LA 70586 (337) 831-6729 PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

Glenn Leleux In Proper Person 426 Nita St. Ville Platte, LA 70586 (337) 988-3109 PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT THIBODEAUX, Chief Judge.

The plaintiffs-appellants, Linton Fontenot and Glenn Leleux, who

were both candidates in an election for the position of Chief of Police for the City

of Ville Platte, Louisiana, appeal the judgment of the trial court granting the

exceptions of prescription, peremption, and no cause of action which were filed on

behalf of the defendants-appellees, Neal Lartigue and Tom Schedler, in his official

capacity as Louisiana Secretary of State. Fontenot and Leleux contend that the

trial court erred in failing to find that they could challenge the election which was

held on December 6, 2014, based on Mr. Lartigue allegedly not qualifying as an

elector in that city at the time of the election. Finding that the trial court correctly

applied the law in dismissing Fontenot’s and Leleux’s case as an untimely

challenge to Mr. Lartigue’s qualifications to be a candidate for this office, we

affirm the trial court’s judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Fontenot and Leleux are electors from Ville Platte and are former

candidates for the position of Ville Platte’s police chief. The qualifying period for

the candidates in this race was August 20-22, 2014. Pursuant to La.R.S. 18:493,

the time period for challenging the failure of a candidate to possess the necessary

qualifications for this race expired at 4:30 p.m. on the seventh day after the close of

the qualifications period, i.e., August 29, 2014. No challenge was made against Mr.

Lartigue during this time period.

The initial election for Ville Platte’s police chief resulted in a runoff

on December 6, 2014, between Mr. Fontenot and Mr. Lartigue; Mr. Lartigue was

the successful candidate, having received 1,688 votes against Mr. Fontenot’s total

votes of 1,246. On December 15, 2014, Fontenot and Leleux filed their suit captioned as “Petition to Contest Election.” In this pleading and the two amending

and supplemental petitions, Fontenot and Leleux averred that Mr. Lartigue did not

live at the address which he gave at the time that he filed his qualifying papers for

this election. In fact, Fontenot and Leleux contend that Mr. Lartigue continues to

reside outside the city limits of Ville Platte. Citing La.R.S. 33:385.1(A), which

requires candidates for an elected chief of police not only to live in the

municipality at the time of qualifying for this position, but also for the immediate

preceding year, excluding two municipalities not involved in the instant case,

Fontenot and Leleux prayed for the trial court to enter judgment invalidating the

election held on December 6, 2014, and directing the Clerk of Court to remove Mr.

Lartigue from the office of police chief for Ville Platte.

Mr. Lartigue responded to this suit with the filing of the peremptory

exceptions of prescription, peremption, and no cause of action. Although Mr.

Lartigue was the only defendant named in Fontenot’s and Leleux’s initial petition,

Tom Schedler, in his official capacity as Secretary of State for Louisiana,

successfully intervened and also filed exceptions of peremption and no cause of

action.

Following arguments by all parties in this action, the trial court

entered judgment sustaining the exceptions of prescription, peremption, and no

cause of action. The trial court denied Fontenot’s and Leleux’s “Motion for New

Trial” and “Motion to Amend Judgment Due to Manifest Error.” They then filed a

suspensive appeal from the trial court’s ruling.

LAW AND DISCUSSION

Fontenot and Leleux argue in this appeal that the trial court has

incorrectly characterized their suit as a challenge to Mr. Lartigue’s qualifications to

2 hold the office of police chief rather than as an election contest. Thus, they

contend that the trial court’s error was applying the law barring any action to

challenge a candidate’s qualifications, which must be filed within seven days of the

end of the qualifying period, rather than applying the law permitting an election

contest to be filed within nine days following the election pursuant to La.R.S.

18:1405(B). Moreover, Fontenot and Leleux interpret the first sentence of La.R.S.

385.1(A) to provide them with this cause of action for an election contest because

Mr. Lartigue was not an elector of Ville Platte at the time the election was held on

December 6, 2014.

Louisiana Revised Statutes 33:385.1(A), entitled qualifications of

elected chief of police, provides:

Except as otherwise provided in this Section, an elected chief of police of a municipality shall be an elector of the municipality. At the time of qualification as a candidate for the office of chief of police, he shall have been domiciled for at least the immediately preceding year in the municipality except that a person who resides outside of the corporate limits of the village of Maurice may be elected chief of police. The provisions of this Section shall not apply to the village of Napoleonville.

The entirety of Fontenot’s and Leleux’s case hinges on their argument

arising from the first sentence of the above-quoted statute. They contend that since

this statute uses the term “elected chief of police,” the statute is requiring that the

person who wins the election for police chief be an elector on the day of the

election. Since their petition avers that Mr. Lartigue was not an elector on the day

of the election, Fontenot and Leleux deduce that the election is subject to contest

and should be declared invalid. We disagree.

As pointed out by Mr. Lartigue in brief to this court, La.R.S. 33:381(B)

states, “The mayor and chief of police in all municipalities shall be elected at

3 large. . . . Municipalities where the chief of police is appointed rather than elected

as of August 1, 1970, may continue to operate with an appointive chief.”

Furthermore, this statute proceeds to list several Louisiana communities in which

the chief of police is appointed rather than elected. Finally, Mr. Lartigue refers to

provisions allowing the mayor and board of alderman to set the qualifications for

an appointed police chief, as opposed to an elected one which is set by such

provisions as the La.R.S. 33:385.1. See, e.g., La.R.S. 33:381(C)(13)(b).

While Mr. Schedler points out that Fontenot and Leleux can pursue

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Related

Evans v. West
357 So. 2d 916 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1978)
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Bluebook (online)
Linton Fontenot v. Neal Lartigue, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linton-fontenot-v-neal-lartigue-lactapp-2014.